jurist
jurist 英 [ˈdʒʊərɪst] 美 [ˈdʒʊrɪst]
n. 法学家;法官;律师;法律著作家
名词复数:jurists
- A jurist is someone who is an expert in details of the legal system. Sometimes the word jurist is used to refer specifically to a lawyer or judge. If you love the law, you might want to be a jurist one day.
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- n. 法学家;法官;律师;法律著作家
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1. The “free seas” advocated by Hugo Grotius, a Dutch jurist, in 1609 never in practice extended quite to the high-tide mark.
“公海”这一概念自1609年由荷兰法学家休苟•格劳提尤斯倡导以来,实际上从没有扩展到最大值。
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2. “I suspect that the experience of the jurist will be the critical consideration and the other factors will be a distant second,” Arsenault said.
“我想作为法学家的经验会是关键考虑因素,而其他因素无关紧要。”阿森诺尔特说。
- jurist (n.) mid-15c., "one who practices law;" 1620s, "a legal writer, one who professes the science of the law," from Middle French juriste (14c.), from Medieval Latin iurista "jurist," from Latin ius (genitive iuris) "a right," especially "legal right or authority, law," also "place where justice is administered, court of justice," from Old Latin ious, perhaps literally "sacred formula," a word peculiar to Latin (not general Italic) that originated in the religious cults, from PIE root *yewes- "law" (compare Latin iurare "to pronounce a ritual formula," Vedic yos "health," Avestan yaoz-da- "make ritually pure," Irish huisse "just"). Related: Juristic. The more mundane Latin law-word lex meant specific laws as opposed to the body of laws.
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